1: The Dead Sea Scrolls as cultural icon
2: The archaeological site and caves
3: On scrolls and fragments
4: New light on the Hebrew Bible
5: The canon, authoritative scriptures, and the scrolls
6: Who owned the scrolls?
7: Literary compositions of the scrolls collections
8: Jewish sectarianism in the Second Temple Period
9: The communities of the Dead Sea Scrolls
10: The religious beliefs of the sectarian communities
11: The scrolls and early Christianity
12: The greatest manuscript discovery
References
Further Reading
Index
Timothy H. Lim is Professor of Hebrew Bible and Second Temple
Period at New College, The University of Edinburgh. He has written
several books and numerous articles on the Dead Sea Scrolls,
including The Formation of the Jewish Canon (Yale University Press,
2013), and he co-edited The Oxford Handbook of the Dead Sea Scrolls
(OUP, 2010), with John J. Collins. He is the General Editor of The
Oxford Commentary on the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Professor Lim is a renowned authority on Biblical and Jewish
Studies and recently delivered the Chuen King Memorial lectures at
the Chinese University of Hong Kong in China.
This very short introduction is an accessible book that arouses the
interest of readers and teases their curiosity to learn more ... In
his ability to synthesize and fascinate, Lim shows his almost
thirty years of know-how in the study and teaching of the Dead Sea
Scrolls.
*Daniele Minisini, Review of Biblical Literature *
A very helpful, personal, and enjoyable introduction.
*Emanuel Tov, The Expository Times*
Having read a number of books previously on this subject, I have a
basic knowledge of the subject, but after reading Lim's book, I
feel my knowledge has grown quite significantly ... A fascinating
subject, treated with down-to-earth gusto, but with a reverence for
the unique and astounding discovery it is.
*Sandra Callard, On: Yorkshire Magazine*
impressively broad-ranging and useful
*Vulpes Libris*
Marvellously concise and elegantly written, this book is a
masterful introduction to the main issues relating to the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The Scrolls in a nutshell!
*John J. Collins, Holmes Professor of Old Testament, Yale a*
...an excellent, brief, but thorough introduction... Lim provides
an authoritative guide to the contents and significance of the
scrolls as ancient documents of major religious importance. That
would be enough to ask, but he also provides a fascinating account
of how these documents have played a role in modern copyright law
and have become a focus for polemically tinged religious conspiracy
theories. What a story!
*Carol A. Newsom, C. H. Candler Professor of Old Testament/Hebrew
Bible, Emory University*
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